Bizarre Attractive Force Found In Mayonnaise

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Scientists at Rice University have identified a phenomenon known as "negative first normal stress difference," which creates an attractive force within fluids, previously thought to occur only in specific plastics, now found in everyday emulsions like mayonnaise and salad dressing. This discovery highlights the importance of ingredient balance in creating stable emulsions; for instance, adding the right amount of protein, such as egg yolk or nuts, can prevent the mixture from breaking. The discussion also draws parallels between emulsions and blood, noting that blood behaves as a thin emulsion and can experience adverse effects when there is an imbalance of fats or other components. The implications of this research suggest that understanding these forces could shed light on health issues related to blood viscosity and cholesterol deposits.
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Scientists at Rice University have discovered that a little-understood tensile force, which was previously thought to be an oddity found only in the types of plastics used to make bulletproof vests, occurs in everyday emulsions like mayonnaise and salad dressing.


First identified about 25 years ago, the phenomenon known as "negative first normal stress difference" refers to an attractive force that is created within fluids under certain conditions. [continued]

http://www.riceinfo.rice.edu/projects/reno/Newsrel/2004/20040329_mayo.shtml
 
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I know a little about this, but not from the attractive force sense, though it would explain many things, it might be that this attractive force also helps make blood clots, or cholesterol deposits. This is what I know.

When making salad dressing, if you don't like an oil and vinegar suspension, that you have to shake up all the time to get a good mix of flavor, then you add the fatty protein of nuts to the suspension, or egg yolk for caesar, and at the right ingredient balance, an emulsion occurs that is nice and creamy, and stays that way. However adding too much of anyone of the three main ingredients, acidic water, oil, protein, then the suspension breaks. The ratio of protein to the mix is lower. Our blood is a very thin emulsion, if there is too much fat, then it precipitates out, or is attracted to the electric charge in the walls of the blood vessels, more than it is attracted to stay in suspension. With an excess of hemoglobin, or in states of dehydration, things occur, in this suspension, that have adverse effects in the human body.

So they say that blood is thicker than water, yes, but not as thick as salad dressing, mayonnaise, or Barbeque sauce. I myself am attracted to mayonnaise, but I avoid it, and instead take in Almonds for fat, or at the very worst, olive oil. My family has a penchant for losing fat from that suspension, and clogging up with cholesterol.
 

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